Forensic Medicine Flashcards
How to find out if a bone is human or not?
-Visual identification: Complete bone such as skull
-Precipitin test: Bone fragments (Find out if it is human or animal)
Identification of sex from skull (Male vs Female)
1:Parietal and frontal eminence: Prominent vs smooth
2:Superciliary ridges: Prominent vs Less prominent
3: Frontonasal junction: Angular vs smooth
4:Mastoid process: Long vs Short
5:Occipital condyle: Long narrow vs Short broad
Identification of sex from sternum
Size: Longer/broader VS Shorter/narrow
Relation between the body and the manubrium: Body x2 length of manubrium VS Less than x2 length of manubrium
Identification of sex from hip bone
Iliac crest: More curved VS Less curved
Greater sciatic notch: Narrow and deep VS Wide and shallow
Obturator foramen: Oval vs triangle
Acetabulum: Deep and wide VS shallow and narrow
Iliopectineal line: Sharp VS smooth
Body of pubis: Long and narrow VS short and square
Periauricular sulcus: Shallow and ill-defined VS deep in multipara
Subpubic arch: Inverted V-shape vs Inverted U-shape
Pelvic cavity: Deep and narrow VS shallow and wide
Identification from sacrum (Sex)
Shape: Long, narrow and curved VS short, wide and straight
promontory: Projected Vs less projected
Sacroiliac Joint: Reaches the 3rd sacral piece Vs Reaches the 2nd sacral piece
Coccyx: Less movable VS more movable
Identification of age from skull
1-Dimension (HC is 13 in at full term, length 5in and width 4in)
2-Fontanels: Posterior closes at full term, Anterior at 2 years
3-Sutures:
- Frontal suture: close at 2 years.
- Sagittal suture: close at 25-30 years.
- Coronal suture: close at 40 years.
- Lambdoid suture: close at 50 years.
- Basi-occipital bone unites with basi-sphenoid at 23 years.
4-Mandible: Identification of age from mandible depend on the angle between the body of the mandible and the ramus:
- Infant: the angle is obtuse.
- Middle age: the angle is right.
- Old age: the angle is obtuse and the alveolar margins become absorbed.
5- Teeth:
Milk dentition:
- Central incisor: 6 months.
- Lateral incisor: 9 months
- First milk molar: 12 months
- Canine: 18 months.
- Second milk molar: 24 months.
Permanent dentition:
- First molar: 6 years.
- Central incisor: 7 years.
- Lateral incisor: 8 years
- First bicuspid: 9 years.
- Second bicuspid: 10 years.
- Canine: 11 years.
- Second molar: 12 years.
- Third molar (wisdom tooth): 18-25 years.
Ossification centers intrauterine life
-5 months Calcaneus
-7 months Talus
-8 months Lower end of femur
-9 months Cuboid, upper end of tibia and lower end of femur (0.5cm in diameter)
Ossification center after birth
-1 year: Head of femur and humerus
-2 year: Lower end of radius, tibia and fibula
-6 year: Lower end of ulna, upper end of radius and medial epicondyle
-12 year: upper end of ulna and lateral epicondyle
Upper limb union of epiphysis
Age Union of epiphysis
14 years Trochlea with capitulum of humerus
15 years Trochlea and capitulum with the shaft of humerus
16 years Lateral epicondyle and upper end of ulna
17 years Medial epicondyle and upper end of radius
18 years Metacarpal and phalanges with shafts
20 years Head of humerus and lower end of radius & ulna
23 years Sternal end of the clavicle
Union of epiphysis of lower limb
16 years Lesser trochanter of femur
17 years Greater trochanter of femur
18 years Head of femur and lower ends of tibia and fibula
21 years Lower end of femur and upper end of tibia
Union of epiphysis of Hip bone
6 years Pubic ramus unites with ischial ramus
15 years Ileum, ischium and pubis unite at the acetabulum (y shaped suture disappears)
21 years Ischial tuberosity
23 years Iliac crest
Union of epiphysis of Sternum/hyoid bone and medullary cavity of humerus
1- Sternum: xiphoid process unites with the body at 40 years and the manubrium unites with the body at 60 years.
2- Hyoid bone: the greater cornu unites with the body at 40 years.
3- Medullary cavity of the humerus: it reaches the surgical neck at 30 years and reaches the anatomical neck at 33 years.
General characters of negroid skull
1- Persistent frontal suture.
2- Absence of H-shaped suture (the four bones of the skull meet at one point).
3- Flat nasal bridge with wide nasal apertures.
4- Flat palate with prognathism (protrusion of upper jaw).
5- Dolichocephaly (elongation of the antero-posterior diameter of the skull).
6- Small mastoid process.
Identification of the dead-
1- Clothes: are examined for tailor’s labels, tears, missing buttons, identity cards, letters, pocket, books… etc.
2- External appearance: color of skin, hair, eyes, shapes of nose, mouth, ears…etc.
3- Sex:
- External examination
- Internal examination: e.g. uterus, ovaries, undescended testis…etc.
- Cell sexing:
Sex chromatin test: female cells show Barr body in the form of chromatin mass attached to the inner surface of the nuclear membrane, but male cell do not show that Barr body.
Davidson body test: white blood cells of females show a thin stalked drum-stick projection in the polymorph nucleus.
4- Age
■ During the first 2 years of life:
a) Milk dentition.
b) Bone.
c) Body weight:
▪ At birth → 3-3.5 kg
▪ At 6 month → 6 kg
▪ At 12 month → 9 kg
▪ At 2 years → 12 kg
■ Between 2-6 years:
d) Body weight: age in years = (weight in kg-8)/2.
e) Ossification centers.
■ Between 6-25 years:
a) Union of epiphysis.
b) Ossification centers.
c) Signs of puberty.
■ Above 25 years:
a) Skull sutures.
b) Sternum and hyoid bone.
c) Signs of senility: grayness of hair, wrinkles of skin, etc…
5- Race: Race can be determined from: color of skin, hair, iris, skull features…etc.
6- Finger print: it is the most accurate method for identification.
7- Social status and occupation may be identified from the clothes or stain on the fingers.
8- Examination for presence of congenital malformation, birth marks, tattoo marks, operations, scars, …etc
Ages of medicolegal importance
-6 years: Age of starting education
▪ Eruption of first permanent molar.
▪ Pubic ramus unites with ischial ramus.
▪ Appearance of ossific centers of upper end of
radius, lower end of ulna & medial epicondyle
-7 years: Age of discrimination between right and wrong
▪ Eruption of permanent central incisor
▪ Ossific center occupies 2/3 of the breadth of
lower end of radius
-14 years: Under this age the boy cannot commit the crime of rape
Trochlea units with the capitulum
-15 years: - Age of end of maternal custody.
-Age of getting identity cards.
- Union of y-shaped suture between ileum,
ischium and pubis of hip bone.
- Union of trochlea and capitulum with the
shaft of humerus
-18 years - Legal age of marriage of
male and female
- The age of female consent
in rape.
- Age of getting driving
license.
- Age of governmental
employment.
- Voting in election.
- Criminal responsibility.
- First military call.
In male: union of epiphysis of metacarpal and
phalanges, head of femur and lower ends of
tibia & fibula.
In female: union of epiphysis of head of
humerus & lower end of ulna and radius.
-21 years - Age of full civil rights
- Age of recruitment of military service
In male: union of epiphysis of lower end of
femur and upper end of tibia & ischial tuberosity.
In female: union of sternal end of clavicle,
epiphysis of iliac crest, basi-occiput with basisphenoid.
-30 years - Age for being a member of
people assembly
Closure of sagittal suture but coronal suture is
still open
-35 years - Legal age of being president
As age 30
-60 years - Pension age
Manubrium & the body of sternum
Definition and stages of Death
Death is the permanent cessation of vital functions (Cardiac, respiratory and CNS)
1- Somatic death (clinical death) in which there is permanent cessation of cardiac, respiratory and CNS functions.
2- Molecular life (physiological window) is the period between clinical and cellular death.
3- Cellular death (molecular death) in which the tissues and their constituent cells are dead. Cellular death follows the ischemia and anoxia consequent to cardiorespiratory failure. Different tissues die at different rates, depending on their ability to function without oxygen. The cerebral cortex can withstand only a few minutes of anoxia (3-8 min), whereas muscle survive for many hours after the cessation of the circulation.
Evidence of molecular life and its medicolegal importance?
- Muscles respond to electric stimulation for 3 hours.
- Motile sperms were found in the epididymis for few days after death.
- Some chemical and enzymatic activities continue after death.
Medicolegally:
The period of molecular life is the period where organ transplantation can be done. The viability of the transplantable organs falls after somatic death. The liver must be taken within 15 min., the kidney within 45 min., and the heart within one hour.
What is suspended animation
It is a death like state (apparent death) in which there is temporary suspension of heart beats and respiration. It is a state where the vital processes of the body are depressed to a minimum compatible with life. However, respiration is not ceased at cellular level, so resuscitation is still possible. It may occur in severe shock following an accident, electric shock, barbiturate, or narcotic poisoning. It can be induced voluntarily in Yoga practitioners. It cannot be certainly differentiated from death when based on ordinary clinical methods therefore additional tests, as ECG and EEG must be done.
Medicolegal importance of Suspended animation?
Prevent premature burial (live burial). It is a general rule that a dead body not transferred from the word to the postmortem room unless 4 hours have been passed since occurrence of somatic death. Also, burial is not allowed before lapse of 8-10 hours.
Immediate signs of death?
1-Cessation of circulation: Primary marker of death, confirmed by prolonged auscultation of the chest exclude hearts sounds though, as in life, a thick chest wall may muffle feeble heartbeat and ECG.
2-Cessation of respiration: Respiration is more difficult to confirm, especially in deep coma such as barbiturate poisoning, and prolonged listening with a stethoscope over the trachea or lung fields is necessary. Some procedures such as saucers of water on the chest and feathers before the nostrils are only of historical interest.
3-Signs of brain death:
- Deep irreversible coma and loss of all reflexes.
- No reaction to painful stimuli.
- Muscular flaccidity occurs immediately upon failure of cerebral and cerebellar function. All muscle tone is lost (dropping of jaw and mydriasis).
- Flat electroencephalogram (EEG).
- Signs of brainstem death
Signs of brainstem death
Brain stem death is irreversible stoppage of all vital centers in the brain stem which maintain spontaneous breathing and circulation (permanent cessation of brain stem functions). Cortical death does not mean brain stem death, so flat EEG is not diagnostic of brain stem death.
When the higher levels of cerebral activity are selectively lost, either from a period of hypoxia, trauma, or toxic insult, the victim will exist in a vegetative state. In vegetative state, the survival of the brainstem ensures that spontaneous breathing will continue and therefore cardiac function is not compromised. The victim can remain in deep coma almost indefinitely.
Diagnosis of brain stem death
1- No corneal and light reflexes.
2- Absent vestibulo-ocular reflex.: Barany’s test (caloric test): No eye movements occur after installation of 5 ml iced water into the ear canal.
3- Absent Cantellis sign (Doll’s eye sign) oculocephalic reflex : Lag of the eye movement as if the gaze is fixed occurs in case of rapid turning of the head.
4- No motor response within cranial nerve distribution.
5- No gag reflex to bronchial stimulation by a catheter passed down the trachea.
6- No respiratory movements occur when the patient is disconnected from the ventilator to ensure that co2 concentration in the blood rises above threshold for stimulating respiration.